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I wanted to make dill bread so used Floyd’s wonderful recipe for Potato Rosemary Rolls yesterday but replaced the rosemary and sage for a huge pile of fresh baby dill. Then I added another huge pile of freshly ground black Tellicherry pepper. We really like things spicy but I was afraid the amount of pepper I used would overpower the dill. Not having made dill bread before (Tingull's looks so good) I also wanted to try using fresh dill to get a feel for the amount desired. I ended up using 2 1/2 teaspoons of freshly ground pepper and roughly 4 packed t
METHOD: The purpose of this test on the sourdough starter is to test how long he takes to rise in a 60% hydration, lean dough.
Time 3:00pm
75.7 degrees F
31.5 and rising barometric pressure
2 oz General Chaos Starter
4 oz AP Walmart Brand Flour
2.25oz Filtered Water (Pur)
3/8 tsp Iodized Salt
Mixed all ingredients together for about 2 minutes until dough formed that pulled away from sides of dough but still stuck to bottom.
Transferred to a large glass measuring cup and covered with plastic wrap and a saucer.
Well Bill and Katie, apparently all that General Chaos aka Sir Stinksalot needed was to be threatened with the arrival of a new kid on the block, "Flat Stanley" (from Katie's parchment experiments)! I used Bill's 1:4:4 for yesterday morning and yesterday night feeds. Each time the little guy doubled in a little under 8 hours!!!! Yippee!!!
So last night I really wanted to drill down on the proper amount of feeding for him every 12 hours (for now) and I tested 3 different formulations and the temp was 75.7 degrees yesterday and last night in the kitchen, with the following results:
I tried another batch of bread with my new white starter. This time, the basic sourdough from BBA. I just replaced the barm in the book's formula with my own starter, since it seems to be about the same consistency. I made the firm starter yesterday and let it rise on the counter for 4 hours, at which point it had doubled. So into the fridge it went. This morning I took it out, cut it into pieces, and let it sit for an hour, then I used the KA mixer to mix the dough. I used KAF Bread flour and gray sea salt.
Xma commented about trying seawater in bread on a diving trip. I decided to give this a try.
Please note: I have not researched health hazards that may result from using raw seawater directly in bread dough.
When I was living back on the coast of Maine, this was one of my favorite breads I would get. The recipe is simple, just a regular ol' white bread with some oil added to it and then TONS of dill.
Also made some strawberry jam yesterday from strawberries we picked yesterday morning. The first jam I'd ever made and I loved it!
Just strawberries, sugar and agar-agar and lemon juice.